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Club Game

About Us

Who We Are and What We Cover

RC Club Game wasn’t built to chase every rumor that floats by. It exists because people wake up and want a clear answer to a simple question. What changed today. Not what might change next quarter. Not what someone hinted at on a podcast. Just what actually happened.

Most of the traffic runs through PC and console news. A patch drops. A delay slips in late on a Friday. A studio headline says one thing while the update notes quietly say another. That gap matters. We pay attention to it.

The site is for readers who don’t have time to wade through noise. If a tweak affects your save file or your weekend plans, that’s the part worth highlighting.

How We Approach Video Game News

Opinion isn’t banned, but it isn’t the starting point. News comes first, even when it’s dry or disappointing. Official posts, confirmed updates, platform announcements. That’s the backbone.

Context has its place. It just doesn’t need to hijack every headline. Quick updates stay quick. Longer pieces take a breath and sort through what the change actually means, if anything. You can skim and move on. Or you can stick around. It’s your call.

We don’t dress routine updates up as seismic events. Sometimes a patch is just a patch.

Editorial Principles and Accuracy

Accuracy sounds lofty until you’re the one double checking timestamps at 11 pm. There’s nothing glamorous about it. Sources get compared. Older statements get pulled back up to see if they still line up. If something can’t be confirmed, we won’t pretend it can.

Rumors stay labeled. Speculation doesn’t get blended into facts to make an article feel fuller. It’s tempting to smooth rough edges. We usually resist that urge.

Trust builds slowly and disappears fast. We’d rather understate than overreach.

How Content Gets Made

Stories usually start with a simple filter. Is there a reliable source. If not, it probably waits. Articles pull from official statements, public announcements, update logs, patch notes. We stick close to what can be verified.

Before a piece goes live, someone else reads it. Clarity matters as much as correctness. After it’s published, it isn’t frozen in time. If details shift, we update. If something’s wrong, we fix it. First drafts aren’t sacred.

The goal isn’t to look flawless. It’s to be transparent about what’s known and when it became known.

The Editorial Team

RC Club Game runs on a compact team that’s been around this cycle long enough to spot patterns. Everyone involved follows the industry daily. We’ve seen how platform decisions land in practice, not just in press releases.

The tone stays steady because the expectations are simple. Be clear. Be careful. Don’t oversell.

Daniel Harper – Senior Video Game News Writer

Daniel handles the fast moving side of things. Sudden announcements. Late night updates. Platform level changes that appear without much warning.

Speed matters in his role, but not at the expense of accuracy. Years on the beat mean he’s less likely to panic over vague wording and more likely to zero in on what players actually need to know right now.

Michael Torres – Video Game News and Features Editor

Michael works further down the timeline. He takes on deeper coverage and feature length pieces that need room to unfold. Franchise arcs. Industry pivots. Decisions that only make sense once you zoom out a bit.

He also reviews broader coverage across the site, making sure facts line up from one article to the next. Continuity counts.

Audience and Geographic Focus

Most of our core readership is in the United States, so coverage naturally leans toward U.S. release schedules and platform updates that affect American players directly. That said, game news rarely respects borders. What shifts in one region usually ripples outward.

We write with that in mind.

Transparency and Responsibility

Editorial work stays separate from commercial activity. Advertisers don’t shape coverage. If something is sponsored, it’s labeled clearly. No gray areas.

Mistakes happen. When they do, they’re corrected. Quiet edits without acknowledgment aren’t helpful to anyone.

How to Get in Touch

You can reach the team through the Contact page for corrections, questions, or feedback. If we miss something or get a detail wrong, we want to hear about it. Silence doesn’t improve coverage. Communication does.